martes, 29 de septiembre de 2009

Resources on the Thesis

Version in English:
On the concept of History. (often referred as...) Theses on the Philosophy of History

Version in Spanish:
Bolivar Echeverría's commented and extended translation (PDF)

(EXCELENT) Essay by Bolívar Echeverría on Benjamin and the thesis:
Benjamin, la condición judía y la política

Benjamin's redemption


Benjamin's redemption here characteristically takes the form of memory and mimesis. A past is to be recognized and recovered; redemption refers to this recovery, or rather dis-covery for the first time, of the sense of distance and depth of time, which properly belongs to experience in the true sense of the word. In short, experience for Benjamin is something by nature in need of retrospective discovery, while each "moment of experience" is always on the verge of becoming lost in its own depthless immediacy. (518)

[Masuzawa, Tomoko. "Tracing the Figure of Redemption Walter Benjamin's Physiognomy of Modernity", in MLN, Vol. 100, No. 3, German Issue (Apr., 1985), pp. 514-536.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/2905529 accessed Sep 29th, 2009.]




The 'spiritual spoils'

What's the real idea behind Benjamin's vision? An ultimate state or the riches of the process? I believe is the 2nd one. Benjamin believes in an 'allegorical' dialectic: a dialectic without final solution that recovers human 'agency'.

Seek for food and clothing first, then
the Kingdom of God shall be added unto you.

Hegel, 1807

The class struggle, which is always present to a historian influenced by Marx, is a fight for the crude and material things without which no refined and spiritual things could exist. Nevertheless, it is not in the form of the spoils which fall to the victor that the latter make their presence felt in the class struggle. They manifest themselves in this struggle as courage, humor, cunning, and fortitude. They have retroactive force and will constantly call in question every victory, past and present, of the rulers. As flowers turn toward the sun, by dint of a secret heliotropism the past strives to turn toward that sun which is rising in the sky of history. A historical materialist must be aware of this most inconspicuous of all transformations.
4th thesis.

Work & Aura: Marxism meets Theology

Experience of the aura thus rests on the transposition of a response common to human relationships to the relationship between the inanimate or natural object and man. The person we look at, or who feels he is being looked at, looks at us in turn. To perceive the aura of an object means to invest it with the ability to look at us in return.
Walter Benjamin, On Some Motifs in Baudelaire

It is just in his work upon the objective world, therefore, that man really proves himself to be a species-being. This production is his active species-life. Through this production, nature appears as his work and his reality. The object of labor is, therefore, the objectification of man’s species-life: for he duplicates himself not only, as in consciousness, intellectually, but also actively, in reality, and therefore he sees himself in a world that he has created. In tearing away from man the object of his production, therefore, estranged labor tears from him his species-life, his real objectivity as a member of the species and transforms his advantage over animals into the disadvantage that his inorganic body, nature, is taken from him.
Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844

Maybe this is the most important point. A new relationship with 'the other', in which objects become 'subjects' to us. This entails a whole new relationship with the world that understands that the object of human labour is not the product of it, but man itself -as he 'creates' himself through his work.
All this illustrates a kind of labor which, far from exploiting nature, is capable of delivering her of the creations which lie dormant in her womb as potentials. Nature, which, as Dietzgen puts it, ‘exists gratis,’ is a complement to the corrupted conception of labor.
11th thesis (fragment).

The Turkish Puppet & the little hunchback



The story is told of an automaton constructed in such a way that it could play a winning game of chess, answering each move of an opponent with a countermove. A puppet in Turkish attire and with a hookah in its mouth sat before a chessboard placed on a large table. A system of mirrors created the illusion that this table was transparent from all sides. Actually, a little hunchback who was an expert chess player sat inside and guided the puppet’s hand by means of strings. One can imagine a philosophical counterpart to this device. The puppet called ‘historical materialism’ is to win all the time. It can easily be a match for anyone if it enlists the services of theology, which today, as we know, is wizened and has to keep out of sight. 
1st thesis.

The image anounces the whole program of the text: Theology as allied force of Historical Materialism.
The turkish puppet, is actually a famous hoax that helps to illustrate the point.

Angelus Novus



"The historical materialist in the moment of danger."


My wing is ready for flight,  
I would like to turn back.If I stayed timeless time, 
I would have little luck. 


Mein Flügel ist zum Schwung bereit,
ich kehrte gern zurück,
denn blieb ich auch lebendige Zeit,
ich hätte wenig Glück.

Gerherd Scholem, 
‘Gruss vom Angelus’


A Klee painting named ‘Angelus Novus’ shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet. The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been smashed. But a storm is blowing in from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such a violence that the angel can no longer close them. The storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what we call progress. 
 9th thesis.

Picturing Walter Benjamin



[t]he Benjamin one is left with is the one who tried in his later years to assimilate his earlier esoteric mode of thought to a theoretical framework that was both materialist and exoteric in nature - the Benjamin of "Some Motifs in Baudelaire" and related studies such as the "Theses on the Philosophy of (38)History". This is the Benjamin who refrained from comporting himself one-sidedly as either a Marxist or metaphysical thinker per se, whose thought instead can be located at the forbidden crossroads of these two theoretical poles. This is the Benjamin who conceived of himself as a redeemer of historical Jetztzeiten or now-times, those uncommon images of redeemed life whose traces occasionally grace the continuum of history. (39)
Wolin, Richard. "Benjamin's Materialist Theory of Experience", in Theory and Society, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Jan., 1982), pp. 17-42. http://www.jstor.org/stable/657284 accessed, Sep 29th, 2009.

Hope in the past



“[t]he future is precisely what Benjamin seeks in the past. Almost every place that his memory wishes to rediscover bears "the features of what is to come," as he puts it at one point in A Berlin Childhood (p. 60). And it is no accident that his memory encounters a manifestation of childhood "in the office of the seer who foretells the future" (p. 57). Proust listens attentively for the echo of the past; Benjamin listens for the first notes of a future which has meanwhile become the past. Unlike Proust, Benjamin does not want to free himself from temporality; he does not wish to see things in their ahistorical essence. He strives instead for historical experience and knowledge. Nevertheless, he is sent back into the past, a past, however, which is open, not completed, and which promises the future. Benjamin's tense is not the perfect, but the future perfect in the fullness of its paradox: being future and past at the same time.” (499)

Szondi, Peter and Harvey Mendelsohn. "Hope in the Past: On Walter Benjamin", in Critical Inquiry, Vol. 4, No. 3 (Spring, 1978), pp. 491-506. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1343071 accessed Sep 29th, 2009.

Abouth the "Thesis..."



This essay by Walter Benjamin explores our responsibility to ‘history’ and the past. The stimulus for the work was the painting, Angelus Novus by Paul Klee. Based on this image Benjamin wrote about the “…the angel of history. His face is towards the past (…) one catastrophe, which keeps piling wreckage upon wreckage hurling it before his feet”. The essay itself is highly allegorical and is made up of XIX thesis and two fragments. In it he aims to revise the Marxist concept of ‘Historical Materialism’, a concept defined as, “it is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but, on the contrary, their social existence that determines their consciousness” (Marx “Preface”). Yet Benjamin builds on this concept by including theology to amplify its scope. In order to that demonstrates the need to combine ‘scientific truth’ and the ‘rest’ of truth: that of ‘the divine’.

Throughout the essay he builds the image of a ‘historical materialist’ as state capable of ‘redemption’ linked to the idea of Klee’s ‘angel of history’. Tomoko Masuzawa has interpreted Benjamin’s use of the word redemption as, “…characteristically [it] takes the form of memory and mimesis. A past is to be recognized and recovered; redemption refers to this recovery, or rather discover for the first time, of the sense of a distance and depth of time, which properly belongs to experience in the true sense of the word” (Masuzawa 518). It is the mission of the ‘historical materialist’ to turn that ‘moment of danger’ as captured in the description of Klee’s painting into a chance to use our very own ‘weak messianic power’ to redeem the past. Additionally, throughout the essay Benjamin also reflects on how historians have misconstrued ‘history’ in order to legitimate the present as ‘Progress’ specifically noting how it has left a pile of ‘rubble’ and thus suffering. Redemption of the past (specially that which has been crushed under the appalling success of Progress that of the ‘defeated’) is an attempt to fight back in the name of a humane mankind.

The Benjamin builds his argument by first declaring how the current generations need to enlist the service of theology. Theology is no other than that ‘little hunchback’ that drives the movements of the ‘Turkish puppet’ called ‘Historical Materialism’. It is in the forces revealed by the theological gaze where the true power of the ‘historical materialist’ lie: that is the ‘realm of the divine’. In order to realize the revolutionary changes needed to create a ‘real state of emergency’ the historical materialist needs to fight for our capacity for true experience. Benjamin, based on Marcel Proust’s ideas, believed this could only happen in the locus of memory (Masuzawa 519). "Where there is experience in the strict sense of the word, certain contents of the individual past combine with materials of the collective past" (Benjamin in Wollin, 33). Experience opens an ‘allegorical’ space. “In Benjamin's analysis, allegory is pre-eminently a kind of experience” (Cowan 110). Allegory signals an unavailable and absent truth while portraying an antinomic situation. This situation is one of inner and irresolvable contradiction: an ever going dialectic, or ‘hyper-dialectic’, as Maurice Merleau-Ponty called it in The Visible and the Invisible. This mode of experience signaled by the figure of allegory (as understood by Benjamin), acknowledges the clashing forces that condition human behavior, but still recognizes the possibility of human agency.

Such understanding of ‘experience’ (Erfahrung opposed to the simple erlebnis: ‘lived moment’) points towards a new comprehension of revolution and class struggle. Orthodox Marxist theory has traditionally been consumed by theorization about how to ‘socialize the means of production’ to achieve the communist utopia. In this way, it has put the stress on the fight for the future and is product oriented. However, Benjamin’s writing attempts to recover the idea of the ‘spiritual goods’ or ‘spiritual spoils’ of the struggle itself. He shows in a very subtle way, that this might be even more important than the material ones. His approach is ‘process oriented’ and totally consistent with Marx’s ideal of work: one where the object of the labor is the man working himself, as a natural being that humanizes his nature or naturalizes his humanism or the the transit from being a simple ‘natural being’ to becoming a ‘natural human being’ (Cfr. Karl Marx, Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts).

The achievement of Benjamin’s aforementioned goal demands becoming aware of ‘the secret pact with the past’ (which makes us capable of agency: our ‘weak messianic power’). Our generation was predicted by previous generations and their hopes lie with us. The ‘pact’ calls for a redemption of the past’s historical values and living sources. There is no causal relation with the past hence making it ours; the vindication of it is the way to claim its heritage and gain the possibility of experience. It means remembering and re-interpreting (mimesis) the past (revitalizing it) in our effort to inhabit and make sense in and of the world. Understanding that the fight is one not for the future generations, but redeeming the past saves the past’s future as well as our own. Our ‘weak’ messianic power lies in the encounter of ‘correspondences’ with the past, which we can enact through building upon sudden moments of realization/memory.

We can do this by empathizing with the past. When aware of the past’s desires there will be a moment or flash, when a person understands the required redemption; a kind of ‘memoire involontaire’. This standstill, this ‘discontinuity’ is an ‘allegorical’ experience. Benjamin compares these ‘flashes’ of memory to how historians have traditionally commoditized and appropriated memory/history in order to suit their own purposes, claiming that they have failed to achieve true understanding and/or change. Instead they are spaces that allows the human agency to take an ‘unfaithful leap’ from the continuum and logics of the ‘storm of Progress’. It is a sublime (hence, aesthetical) experience biding for recognition of other possibilities of relation with the ‘other’ (humans, nature, things). It is also the space for the ‘messianic power’ allowing us to choose to either serve the historically dominant classes or as Benjamin hopes, redeem the past. Additionally it is the ‘now-time’ –Jetszeit. The moment where “[h]istorical experience pulls the face of the past and present together in a short but ecstatic kiss” (Ankersmit 121). If we are able to actualize this ‘now-time’, then the ‘empty-homogenous time’ of Progress is shattered. Instead there will be a future through the past and a chance to reclaim the chips of messianic time and move toward a more egalitarian society.

According to Benjamin time is not an empty-homogenous thing. Time is historical and densely populated by discourses, institutions and structures shaping the world. Thus, he thinks that one must direct criticism against time’s foundations by blasting through its abstraction and situating it in the present. This in turn, requires abandoning of the idea of subject as transcendental and replacing it with embodied and historical one. This subject is affected by forces of history, but still has a power (even if weak) enact change. Thus it is important to remember this responsibility and stop understanding history as a ‘dialectic’ endeavor between past and present. Instead the friction between now and then, evident in the antinomic and unfulfillable structure of allegory, can ignite a spark of insight in order to explode the continuum of progress.

What is the role of theology in all of these propositions? Why bring this unfashionable concept into modern society, which unavoidably makes eyebrows rise and awakens suspicions? Why did Walter Benjamin choose to remain “located at the forbidden crossroads of these two theoretical poles” of Marxism and Mysticism (Wolin 39)? The answer is that Benjamin understood the urgency and importance of experiencing the ‘aura’ of things or the return of the human gaze by ‘objects’. This meant developing a ‘style’’ of thinking that understands and accepts the fact that chance is the contingent foundation of need and order. Both of these concepts form man’s horizon of understanding. Benjamin hopes to posit a new kind of rational discourse that allows itself to include a profane notion of ‘the divine’ and allows a new relationship with this ‘other’ and respectfully gives it dignity. In words of Bolivar Echeverría:

“A use of the rational discourse capable of recognizing the other as a subject; of not emptying and impoverishing it by reducing it to a mere object (nature), a mere pile of always renewable natural resources that are there ‘free’ at man’s –‘the’ subject-disposal; a discourse that sets out from the ‘materialist mysticism’ characteristic of a humane labor that ‘doesn’t exploit Nature but is capable of awakening the creations dormant in its womb’ –in the same way that a sculptor only ‘takes out’ of the stone block the figure that was already hidden in it.” (Echeverría 31).



Works Cited

Ankersmit, Frank. Sublime Historical Experience. California: Standford University Press, 2005.

Benjamin, Walter. On the Concept of History. Translation by Dennis Redmond. http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/benjamin/1940/history.htm accessed on September 7th, 2009.

---. On the concept of history. (Often referred as...) The theses on the philosophy of history. http://www.sfu.ca/~andrewf/CONCEPT2.html accessed on September 7th, 2009.

---. Tesis sobre la historia y otros fragmentos. Translation, Edition and Introduction by Bolivar Echeverría. http://www.bolivare.unam.mx/traducciones/tesis.pdf accessed on September 20th, 2009.

Cowan, Bainard. “Walter Benjamin’s Theory of Allegory”, in New German Critique, No. 22, Special Issue on Modernism (Winter, 1981), pp. 109-122. http://www.jstor.org/stable/487866 accessed on September 7th, 2009.

Marx, Karl. “Preface”, in A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy. http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1859/critique-pol-economy/preface.htm accessed on September 20th, 2009.

---. Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts. http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1844/manuscripts/preface.htm accessed on September 20th, 2009.

Masuzawa, Tomoko. “Tracing the Figure of Redemption. Walter Benjamin’s Physiognomy of Modernity”, in MLN, Vol.100, No.3, German Issue (Apr., 1985), pp.514-536. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2905529 accessed on September 20th, 2009.

Wolin, Richard. “Benjamin’s Materialist Theory of Experience”, in Theory and Society, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Jan., 1982), pp. 17-42. http://www.jstor.org/stable/657284 accessed on September 7th, 2009.

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